Crypto Leaders Say Washington Finally Realizes Regulatory Uncertainty Is Costing America Billions

Crypto Leaders Say Washington Finally Realizes Regulatory Uncertainty Is Costing America Billions

The cryptocurrency industry says the U.S. may finally be moving toward a workable legal framework for digital assets after the Senate Banking Committee advanced the Clarity Act, a bill supporters argue could end years of regulatory confusion that pushed innovation offshore.

The committee approved the legislation Thursday by a 15-9 vote, moving the most significant crypto market structure bill yet closer to the Senate floor. The proposal would establish formal jurisdictional boundaries between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission while creating clearer rules for token launches, decentralized finance activity and non-custodial software.

Industry executives described the bill as a pivotal shift for American crypto policy, though many cautioned that the legislation still faces a difficult path through Congress and years of additional rulemaking.

“The CLARITY Act is exactly what the crypto industry needs,” Jeff Amico, COO of Gensyn told Yellow.com in an emailed statement. “The current system is opaque and allows bad actors - from exchanges to token issuers - to take advantage of retail users.”

The U.S. crypto sector has spent years operating under overlapping enforcement actions from federal agencies, with companies often uncertain whether tokens would be treated as securities, commodities or something else entirely.

Industry Says Tokenization Has Already Moved Ahead Of Regulators

Executives across the sector argued the legislation matters less because it validates blockchain technology and more because it acknowledges a market structure already emerging globally.

“Regulated tokenized securities are no longer theoretical,” said Jesse Knutson, Head of Operations at Bitfinex Securities. “Issuers want faster access to capital, investors want access to markets that are not limited by legacy infrastructure, and institutions have been waiting for rules clear enough to justify larger commitments.”

The bill’s supporters say clearer oversight could help bring institutional capital into tokenized securities, stablecoins and decentralized finance markets while reducing legal uncertainty for developers building blockchain infrastructure in the United States.

Mari Tomunen, General Counsel at DoubleZero, said one of the legislation’s most important features is its treatment of decentralized and non-custodial software.

“The Clarity Act helps create clearer statutory boundaries for decentralized and non-custodial activity,” Tomunen said, adding that existing guidance often incentivized projects to disclose less information out of fear of increasing securities liability.

The measure passed committee largely along party lines, though Democratic Sens. Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland joined Republicans in supporting the bill. Chairman Tim Scott said the digital asset sector had been trapped in a “regulatory gray zone” for too long.

The House passed its own version of the legislation in July 2025, meaning lawmakers must still reconcile differences between the chambers before any final bill can reach President Donald Trump.

Industry Warns U.S. Still Risks Falling Behind Global Crypto Hubs

Despite optimism around the bill, several industry figures warned that the United States still risks losing ground to jurisdictions moving faster on digital asset regulation.

Also Read: Privacy Coins Outperforming Bitcoin: The Performance Gap In 2026

Angus Scott, founder of the Solana Research Institute, said the legislation is likely only the beginning of a much longer regulatory process.

“The CLARITY Act is likely to be merely a first step down a long regulatory road rather than the last word on the subject,” Scott said. “The UAE, Singapore and Hong Kong have not waited for American consensus to form.”

That concern has become increasingly central to Washington’s crypto debate as countries including the United Arab Emirates and Singapore aggressively position themselves as digital asset hubs with licensing frameworks already in place.

Banking trade groups also continue opposing parts of the legislation, particularly provisions around stablecoin rewards, warning that tokenized dollar systems could draw deposits away from traditional lenders and weaken bank balance sheets.

Crypto firms counter that the legislation includes guardrails and only permits rewards under limited consumer payment scenarios.

Senate Vote Remains Biggest Obstacle

While the committee vote represented the bill’s strongest legislative progress yet, the legislation still faces major political hurdles before becoming law.

Markus Levin, co-founder of XYO, said the hearing exposed a genuine divide between lawmakers who view crypto primarily as a market structure issue and those focused on ethics and enforcement concerns.

“The bipartisan signal from today is real but fragile,” Levin said. “If the negotiating space that opened today holds, there’s a credible path to 60 votes.”

That 60-vote threshold remains the immediate challenge in the Senate, where Democrats and Republicans remain divided over decentralized finance provisions, stablecoin oversight and conflict-of-interest concerns surrounding crypto holdings by political figures.

The White House has reportedly targeted July 4 for a final presidential signature, though negotiators still must reconcile Senate and House versions before any final passage can occur.

For the crypto industry, however, even advancing the legislation this far marks a major shift after years of stalled negotiations and canceled hearings.

“Serious teams are more than happy to comply with regulation like this,” Amico said. “It helps separate the good actors from bad.”

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Disclaimer and Risk Warning: The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is based on the author's opinion. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency assets are highly volatile and subject to high risk, including the risk of losing all or a substantial amount of your investment. Trading or holding crypto assets may not be suitable for all investors. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not represent the official policy or position of Yellow, its founders, or its executives. Always conduct your own thorough research (D.Y.O.R.) and consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decision.
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Crypto Leaders Say Washington Finally Realizes Regulatory Uncertainty Is Costing America Billions | Yellow.com